Cirrosis
Cirrosis
Cirrosis
com
Cirrhosis
Updated: Oct 15, 2020
Author: David C Wolf, MD, FACP, FACG, AGAF, FAASLD; Chief Editor: BS Anand, MD
Practice Essentials
Cirrhosis is defined histologically as a diffuse hepatic process characterized by fibrosis
and conversion of the normal liver architecture into structurally abnormal nodules. The
progression of liver injury to cirrhosis may occur over several weeks to years.
Some patients with cirrhosis are completely asymptomatic and have a reasonably
normal life expectancy. Other individuals have a multitude of the most severe symptoms
of end-stage liver disease and a limited chance for survival. Common signs and
symptoms may stem from decreased hepatic synthetic function (eg, coagulopathy),
portal hypertension (eg, variceal bleeding), or decreased detoxification capabilities of
the liver (eg, hepatic encephalopathy).
Portal hypertension
Hepatomegaly
Abdominal pain
Ascites
Abdominal distention
Bulging flanks
Shifting dullness
Hepatic encephalopathy
The symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy may range from mild to severe and may be
observed in as many as 70% of patients with cirrhosis. Symptoms are graded on the
following scale:
Many patients with cirrhosis experience fatigue, anorexia, weight loss, and muscle
wasting. Cutaneous manifestations of cirrhosis include jaundice, spider angiomata, skin
telangiectasias ("paper money skin"), palmar erythema, white nails, disappearance of
lunulae, and finger clubbing, especially in the setting of hepatopulmonary syndrome.
Diagnosis
Hepatorenal syndrome
Portal hypertension
Hepatic encephalopathy
An elevated arterial or free venous serum ammonia level is the classic laboratory
abnormality reported in patients with hepatic encephalopathy.
Electroencephalography may be helpful in the initial workup of a patient with cirrhosis
and altered mental status, when ruling out seizure activity may be necessary.
Computed tomography (CT) scanning and MRI studies of the brain may be important in
ruling out intracranial lesions when the diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy is in
question.
Ascites
Management
Specific medical therapies may be applied to many liver diseases in an effort to diminish
symptoms and to prevent or forestall the development of cirrhosis. Examples of such
treatments include the following:
Ascites - Treatment can include sodium restriction and the use of diuretics,
large-volume paracentesis, and shunts (peritoneovenous, portosystemic,
transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic)
Liver transplantation
Patients should be referred for consideration for liver transplantation after the first signs
of hepatic decompensation.
Overview
Cirrhosis represents the final common histologic pathway for a wide variety of chronic
liver diseases. The term cirrhosis was first introduced by Laennec in 1826. It is derived
from the Greek term scirrhus and refers to the orange-brown or tawny surface of the
liver seen at autopsy.
Many forms of liver injury are marked by fibrosis, which is defined as an excess
deposition of the components of the extracellular matrix (ie, collagens, glycoproteins,
proteoglycans) in the liver. This response to liver injury potentially is reversible. By
contrast, in most patients, cirrhosis is not a reversible process.
In addition to fibrosis, the complications of cirrhosis include, but are not limited to, portal
hypertension, ascites, hepatorenal syndrome, and hepatic encephalopathy.
Often a poor correlation exists between the histologic findings in cirrhosis and the
clinical picture. Some patients with cirrhosis are completely asymptomatic and have a
reasonably normal life expectancy. Other individuals have a multitude of the most
severe symptoms of end-stage liver disease and have a limited chance for survival.
Common signs and symptoms may stem from decreased hepatic synthetic function (eg,
coagulopathy), decreased detoxification capabilities of the liver (eg, hepatic
encephalopathy), or portal hypertension (eg, variceal bleeding).
In August 2012, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) expanded their
existing, risk-based testing guidelines to recommend a 1-time blood test for hepatitis C
virus (HCV) infection in baby boomers—the generation born between 1945 and 1965,
who account for approximately three fourths of all chronic HCV infections in the United
States—without prior ascertainment of HCV risk (see Recommendations for the
Identification of Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection Among Persons Born During 1945–
1965).[2] One-time HCV testing in this population could identify nearly 808,600
additional people with chronic infection. All individuals identified with HCV should be
screened and/or managed for alcohol abuse, followed by referral to preventative and/or
treatment services, as appropriate.
For patient education information, see the Mental Health Center, as well as Alcoholism.
Etiology
Alcoholic liver disease once was considered to be the predominant source of cirrhosis
in the United States, but hepatitis C has emerged as the nation's leading cause of
chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis.
Many cases of cryptogenic cirrhosis appear to have resulted from nonalcoholic fatty
liver disease (NAFLD). When cases of cryptogenic cirrhosis are reviewed, many
patients have one or more of the classic risk factors for NAFLD: obesity, diabetes, and
hypertriglyceridemia.[3] It is postulated that steatosis may regress in some patients as
hepatic fibrosis progresses, making the histologic diagnosis of NAFLD difficult.
Flavinoids have been reported to have positive effects on key pathophysiologic
pathways in NAFLD (eg, lipid metabolism, insulin resistance, inflammation, oxidative
stress) and may hold future potential for inclusion in NAFLD treatment.[4]
Up to one third of Americans have NAFLD. About 2-3% of Americans have nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis (NASH), in which fat deposition in the hepatocyte is complicated by liver
inflammation and fibrosis. It is estimated that 10% of patients with NASH will ultimately
develop cirrhosis. NAFLD and NASH are anticipated to have a major impact on the
United States' public health infrastructure.
The most common causes of cirrhosis in the United States include the following:
Hepatitis C (26%)
Miscellaneous (5%)
Miscellaneous causes of chronic liver disease and cirrhosis include the following:
Autoimmune hepatitis
Hemochromatosis
Wilson disease
Epidemiology
United States data
Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis result in about 35,000 deaths each year in the
United States. Cirrhosis is the ninth leading cause of death in the United States and is
responsible for 1.2% of all US deaths. Many patients die from the disease in their fifth or
sixth decade of life. The incidence of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and
nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is expected to rise, leading to an increased
incidence of cirrhosis.[5]
Each year, 2000 additional deaths are attributed to fulminant hepatic failure (FHF). FHF
may be caused viral hepatitis (eg, hepatitis A and B), drugs (eg, acetaminophen), toxins
(eg, Amanita phalloides, the yellow death-cap mushroom), autoimmune hepatitis,
Wilson disease, or a variety of less common etiologies. Cryptogenic causes are
responsible for one third of fulminant cases. Patients with the syndrome of FHF have a
50-80% mortality rate unless they are salvaged by liver transplantation.
International data
Worldwide, cirrhosis is the 14th most common cause of death, but in Europe, it is the
4th most common cause of death.[6]
Hepatic Fibrosis
The development of hepatic fibrosis reflects an alteration in the normally balanced
processes of extracellular matrix production and degradation.[8] The extracellular
matrix, the normal scaffolding for hepatocytes, is composed of collagens (especially
types I, III, and V), glycoproteins, and proteoglycans.
Stellate cells, located in the perisinusoidal space, are essential for the production of
extracellular matrix. Stellate cells, which were once known as Ito cells, lipocytes, or
perisinusoidal cells, may become activated into collagen-forming cells by a variety of
paracrine factors. Such factors may be released by hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, and
sinusoidal endothelium following liver injury. As an example, increased levels of the
cytokine transforming growth factor beta1 (TGF-beta1) are observed in patients with
chronic hepatitis C and those with cirrhosis. TGF-beta1, in turn, stimulates activated
stellate cells to produce type I collagen.
In a study that evaluated serum cytokine levels between healthy patients, those with
stable cirrhosis, and patients with decompensated cirrhosis with and without the
development of acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF), Dirchwolf et al found the presence
of distinct cytokine phenotypes was associated with cirrhosis severity.[9] Relative to the
healthy patients, those with cirrhosis had elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines
(interleukin [IL]-6, -7, -8, -10, and -12, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-α]) and
chemoattractant elements. Leukocyte count was positively correlated with disease
severity across the scoring systems used, levels of IL-6 and IL-8 had positive
correlation with Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score, and IL-6 alone had a
positive correlation with chronic liver failure-sequential organ failure assessment (Clif-
SOFA) score at day 7 (but a negative correlation with IL-2 at admission).[9]
Increased collagen deposition in the space of Disse (the space between hepatocytes
and sinusoids) and the diminution of the size of endothelial fenestrae lead to the
capillarization of sinusoids. Activated stellate cells also have contractile properties.
Capillarization and constriction of sinusoids by stellate cells contribute to the
development of portal hypertension.
Future drug strategies to prevent fibrosis may focus on reducing hepatic inflammation,
inhibiting stellate cell activation, inhibiting the fibrogenic activities of stellate cells, and
stimulating matrix degradation.
Portal Hypertension
Causes
The normal liver has the ability to accommodate large changes in portal blood flow
without appreciable alterations in portal pressure. Portal hypertension results from a
combination of increased portal venous inflow and increased resistance to portal blood
flow.
Patients with cirrhosis demonstrate increased splanchnic arterial flow and, accordingly,
increased splanchnic venous inflow into the liver. Increased splanchnic arterial flow is
explained partly by decreased peripheral vascular resistance and increased cardiac
output in the patient with cirrhosis. Nitric oxide appears to be the major driving force for
this phenomenon.[10]
Increased resistance across the sinusoidal vascular bed of the liver is caused by fixed
factors and dynamic factors. Two thirds of intrahepatic vascular resistance can be
explained by fixed changes in the hepatic architecture. Such changes include the
formation of regenerating nodules and, after the production of collagen by activated
stellate cells, deposition of the collagen within the space of Disse.
Dynamic factors account for one third of intrahepatic vascular resistance. Stellate cells
serve as contractile cells for adjacent hepatic endothelial cells. The nitric oxide
produced by the endothelial cells, in turn, controls the relative degree of vasodilation or
vasoconstriction produced by the stellate cells. In cirrhosis, decreased local production
of nitric oxide by endothelial cells permits stellate cell contraction, with resulting
vasoconstriction of the hepatic sinusoid. (This contrasts with the peripheral circulation,
where there are high circulating levels of nitric oxide in cirrhosis.) Increased local levels
of vasoconstricting chemicals, such as endothelin, may also contribute to sinusoidal
vasoconstriction.
Prehepatic causes
Prehepatic causes include splenic vein thrombosis and portal vein thrombosis. These
conditions commonly are associated with hypercoagulable states and with malignancy
(eg, pancreatic cancer). In a retrospective study (2002-2014) of 66 patients with
cirrhosis and portal vein thrombosis, Chen et al reported that warfarin anticoagulation
may potentially safely and effectively resolve cases of more advanced portal vein
thrombosis.[11] However, they did not observe any benefit of anticoagulation on
decompensation or mortality. Levels of albumin were significant predictors of
decompensated disease at 1 year.[11]
Intrahepatic causes
Posthepatic causes
Posthepatic causes of portal hypertension may include chronic right-sided heart failure
and tricuspid regurgitation and obstructing lesions of the hepatic veins and inferior vena
cava. The latter conditions, and the symptoms they produce, are termed Budd-Chiari
syndrome. Predisposing conditions include hypercoagulable states, tumor invasion into
the hepatic vein or inferior vena cava, and membranous obstruction of the inferior vena
cava. Inferior vena cava webs are observed most commonly in South and East Asia
and are postulated to be due to nutritional factors.
Measurement
AASLD recommendations
The 2016 American Association for the study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) provides the
following guidance for noninvasive testing for the diagnosis of clinically significant portal
hypertension (CSPH)[13] :
Complications
The HVPG is defined as the difference in pressure between the portal vein and the
inferior vena cava. Thus, the HVPG is equal to the WHVP value minus the FHVP value
(ie, HVPG = WHVP - FHVP). The normal HVPG is 3-6 mm Hg.
AASLD recommendations
The AASLD recommends the following for noninvasive testing for the diagnosis of
gastroesophageal varices[13] :
Patients with a liver stiffness below 20 kPa and a platelet count over 150,000/μL
have a very low probability (< 5%) of having high-risk varices, and
esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) can be circumvented.
In patients who do not meet these criteria, screening endoscopy for the
diagnosis of gastroesophageal varices is recommended when the diagnosis of
cirrhosis is made.
Ascites
Ascites, which is an accumulation of excessive fluid within the peritoneal cavity, can be
a complication of either hepatic or nonhepatic disease. The four most common causes
of ascites in North America and Europe are cirrhosis, neoplasm, congestive heart
failure, and tuberculous peritonitis.
Nonperitoneal causes
Causes of Nonperitoneal
Examples
Ascites
Cirrhosis
Intrahepatic portal
Fulminant hepatic failure
hypertension
Veno-occlusive disease
Nephrotic syndrome
Hypoalbuminemia
Protein-losing enteropathy, Malnutrition
Myxedema
Ovarian tumors
Miscellaneous disorders
Pancreatic ascites
Biliary ascites
Secondary to malignancy
Peritoneal causes
Peritoneal diseases produce ascites with a SAAG of less than 1.1 g/dL. (See Table 2,
below.)
Causes of Peritoneal
Examples
Ascites
Tuberculous peritonitis
Fluid and plasma proteins diffuse freely across the highly permeable sinusoidal
endothelium into the space of Disse. Fluid in the space of Disse, in turn, enters the
lymphatic channels that run within the portal and central venous areas of the liver.
Patients with cirrhosis experience sodium retention, impaired free-water excretion, and
intravascular volume overload. These abnormalities may occur even in the setting of a
normal glomerular filtration rate. They are, to some extent, due to increased levels of
renin and aldosterone.
Abdominal distention
Bulging flanks
Shifting dullness
A fluid wave may be elicited in patients with massive tense ascites. However, physical
examination findings are much less sensitive than abdominal ultrasonography, which
can detect as little as 30 mL of fluid. Furthermore, ultrasonography with Doppler can
help to assess the patency of hepatic vessels.
Factors associated with worsening of ascites include excess fluid or salt intake,
malignancy, venous occlusion (eg, Budd-Chiari syndrome), progressive liver disease,
and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP).
SBP is observed in 15-26% of patients hospitalized with ascites. The syndrome arises
most commonly in patients whose low-protein ascites (< 1 g/dL) contains low levels of
complement, resulting in decreased opsonic activity. SBP appears to be caused by the
translocation of gastrointestinal (GI) tract bacteria across the gut wall and also by the
hematogenous spread of bacteria. The most common causative organisms are
Escherichia coli, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella species, and other gram-
negative enteric organisms.[17]
The most commonly used regimen in the treatment of SBP is a 5-day course of
cefotaxime at 1-2g intravenously every 8 hours.[18] Alternatives include oral ofloxacin
and other IV antibiotics with activity against gram-negative enteric organisms. Many
authorities advise repeat paracentesis in 48-72 hours to document a decrease in the
ascites PMN count to less than 250 cells/mm3 to ensure efficacy of therapy.
Once SBP develops, patients have a 70% chance of redeveloping the condition within 1
year. Prophylactic antibiotic therapy can reduce the recurrence rate of SBP to 20%.
Some of the regimens used in the prophylaxis of SBP include norfloxacin at 400 mg
orally every day[19] and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole at 1 double-strength tablet 5
days per week.[20]
Therapy with norfloxacin at 400 mg orally twice per day for 7 days can reduce serious
bacterial infection in patients with cirrhosis who have GI bleeding. One study noted that
the 37% incidence of serious bacterial infection was reduced to 10% when treatment
with norfloxacin was instituted.[21] Furthermore, it can be argued that all patients with
low-protein ascites should undergo prophylactic therapy (eg, with norfloxacin 400 mg
daily PO) at the time of hospital admission, given the high incidence of hospital-
acquired SBP.[22]
Hernias
Umbilical and inguinal hernias are common in patients with moderate and massive
ascites. The use of an elastic abdominal binder may protect the skin overlying a
protruding umbilical hernia from maceration and may help to prevent rupture and
subsequent infection. Timely, large-volume paracentesis also may help to prevent this
disastrous complication.
Umbilical hernias should not undergo elective repair unless patients are significantly
symptomatic or their hernias are irreducible. As with all other surgeries in patients with
cirrhosis, herniorrhaphy carries multiple potential risks, such as intraoperative bleeding,
postoperative infection, and liver failure, because of anesthesia-induced reductions in
hepatic blood flow. However, these risks become acceptable in patients with severe
symptoms from their hernia. Urgent surgery is necessary in the patient whose hernia
has been complicated by bowel incarceration.
Glucose (minimal
Cell count Cytology
use)
Lactate
Albumin Tuberculosis smear and culture
dehydrogenase
Culture Gram stain Triglycerides (to rule out chylous ascites)
Ascitic fluid with more than 250 PMNs/mm3 defines neutrocytic ascites and SBP. Many
cases of ascites fluid with more than 1000 PMNs/mm3 (and certainly >5000
PMNs/mm3) are associated with appendicitis or a perforated viscus with resulting
bacterial peritonitis. Appropriate radiologic studies must be performed in such patients
to rule out surgical causes of peritonitis.
Therapy for ascites should be tailored to the patient's needs. Some patients with mild
ascites respond to sodium restriction or diuretics taken once or twice per week. Other
patients require aggressive diuretic therapy, careful monitoring of electrolytes, and
occasional hospitalization to facilitate even more intensive diuresis.
The development of massive ascites that is refractory to medical therapy has dire
prognostic implications, with only 50% of patients surviving 6 months.[24]
Sodium restriction
Salt restriction is the first line of therapy. In general, patients begin with a diet containing
less than 2000 mg of sodium daily. Some patients with refractory ascites require a diet
containing less than 500 mg of sodium daily. However, ensuring that patients do not
construct diets that might place them at risk for calorie and protein malnutrition is
important. Indeed, the benefit of commercially available liquid nutritional supplements
(which often contain moderate amounts of sodium) often exceeds the risk of slightly
increasing the patient's salt intake.
Diuretics
Aggressive diuretic therapy in hospitalized patients with massive ascites can safely
induce a weight loss of 0.5-1kg daily, provided that patients undergo careful monitoring
of renal function. Diuretic therapy should be held in the event of electrolyte
disturbances, azotemia, or induction of hepatic encephalopathy.
Albumin
Thus far, evidence-based medicine has not firmly supported the use of albumin as an
aid to diuresis in a patient with cirrhosis who is hospitalized. The author's anecdotal
experience suggests that albumin may increase the efficacy and safety of diuretics. The
author's practice in hospitalized patients who are hypoalbuminemic is to administer IV
furosemide following IV infusion of albumin at 25g twice daily, in addition to providing
ongoing therapy with spironolactone. One article supported the use of chronic albumin
infusions to achieve diuresis in patients with diuretic-resistant ascites.[26]
Albumin infusion may protect against the development of renal insufficiency in patients
with SBP. Patients receiving cefotaxime and albumin at 1 g/kg daily experienced a lower
risk of renal failure and a lower in-hospital mortality rate than patients treated with
cefotaxime and conventional fluid management.[27]
V2 receptor antagonists
Vasopressin V2 receptor antagonists are a class of agents with the potential to increase
free-water excretion, improve diuresis, and decrease the need for paracentesis.
However, no such agent has received US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
approval for this indication.
Tolvaptan (Samsca, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co; Tokyo, Japan) is an oral V2 receptor
antagonist; it received FDA approval in 2009 only for the management of hyponatremia.
A black box warning cautions against treatment initiation in outpatients. Furthermore, it
may be associated with an increased incidence of GI bleeding in patients with cirrhosis.
The author advises against its use for ascites management at this time.
Large-volume paracentesis
Large-volume paracentesis was first used in ancient times. It fell out of favor from the
1950s through the 1980s with the advent of diuretic therapy and following a handful of
case reports describing paracentesis-induced azotemia. In 1987, Gines and colleagues
demonstrated that large-volume paracentesis could be performed with minimal or no
impact on renal function.[28] This and other studies showed that 5-15 L of ascites could
be removed safely at one time.
Peritoneovenous shunts
LeVeen shunts and Denver shunts are devices that permit the return of ascites fluid and
proteins to the intravascular space. Plastic tubing inserted subcutaneously under local
anesthesia connects the peritoneal cavity to the internal jugular vein or subclavian vein
via a pumping chamber. These devices are successful at relieving ascites and reversing
protein loss in some patients. However, shunts may clot and require replacement in
30% of patients.
Serious complications are observed in at least 10% of the recipients of these devices,
including peritoneal infection, sepsis, disseminated intravascular coagulation,
congestive heart failure, and death. The author considers peritoneovenous shunts to be
a last resort for patients with refractory ascites who are not candidates for TIPS or liver
transplantation. The safety of repeat large-volume paracentesis procedures may
actually outweigh the safety of peritoneovenous shunt placement.
The prime indication for portocaval shunt surgery is the management of refractory
variceal bleeding. Since 1945, however, the medical field has recognized that
portocaval shunts, by decompressing the hepatic sinusoid, may improve ascites. The
performance of a side-to-side portocaval shunt for ascites management must be
weighed against the approximate 5% mortality rate associated with this surgery and the
chance (as high as 30%) of inducing hepatic encephalopathy.
A TIPS is an effective tool in managing massive ascites in some patients. Ideally, TIPS
placement produces a decrease in sinusoidal pressure and in plasma renin and
aldosterone levels, with subsequent improved urinary sodium excretion. In one study,
74% of patients with refractory ascites achieved complete remission of ascites within 3
months of TIPS placement.[29] Typically, about one half of appropriately selected
patients undergoing TIPS achieve significant relief of ascites.
Both a pre-TIPS bilirubin level of greater than 3 mg/dL and a pre-TIPS Model for End-
Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score of greater than 18 (see the MELD Score calculator)
are associated with an increased mortality rate when a TIPS is created for the
management of ascites.[33, 34] In the author's opinion, TIPS use should be reserved
for patients with Child Class B cirrhosis or patients with Child Class C cirrhosis without
severe coagulopathy or encephalopathy.
In the 1990s, shunt stenosis was observed in one half of cases within 1 year of TIPS
placement, necessitating angiographic revision. Although the advent of coated stents
appears to have reduced the incidence of shunt stenosis, patients must still be willing to
return to the hospital for Doppler and angiographic follow-up of TIPS patency.
Liver transplantation
Patients with massive ascites have 1-year survival rate of less than 50%. Liver
transplantation should be considered as a potential means of salvaging the patient prior
to the onset of intractable liver failure or hepatorenal syndrome.
Hepatorenal Syndrome
This syndrome represents a continuum of renal dysfunction that may be observed in
patients with a combination of cirrhosis and ascites. Hepatorenal syndrome is caused
by the vasoconstriction of large and small renal arteries and the impaired renal
perfusion that results.[35]
Most patients with hepatorenal syndrome are noted to have minimal histologic changes
in the kidneys. Kidney function usually recovers when patients with cirrhosis and
hepatorenal syndrome undergo liver transplantation. In fact, a kidney donated by a
patient dying from hepatorenal syndrome functions normally when transplanted into a
renal transplant recipient.
Hepatorenal syndrome progression may be slow (type II) or rapid (type I).[36] Type I
disease frequently is accompanied by rapidly progressive liver failure. Hemodialysis
offers temporary support for such patients. These individuals are salvaged only by
performance of liver transplantation. Exceptions to this rule are the patients with
fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) or severe alcoholic hepatitis who spontaneously recover
liver and kidney function. In type II hepatorenal syndrome, patients may have stable or
slowly progressive renal insufficiency. Many such patients develop ascites that is
resistant to management with diuretics.
Diagnosis
Treatment
Pathogenesis
Ammonia hypothesis
Ammonia has multiple neurotoxic effects, including alteration of the transit of amino
acids, water, and electrolytes across the neuronal membrane. Ammonia also can inhibit
the generation of excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials. Therapeutic
strategies to reduce serum ammonia levels tend to improve hepatic encephalopathy.
However, approximately 10% of patients with significant encephalopathy have normal
serum ammonia levels. Furthermore, many patients with cirrhosis have elevated
ammonia levels without evidence of encephalopathy.
However, brain levels of neurosteroids are increased in patients with cirrhosis.[41] They
are capable of binding to their receptor within the neuronal GABA receptor complex and
can increase inhibitory neurotransmission. Some investigators currently contend that
neurosteroids may play a key role in hepatic encephalopathy.[42]
Clinical features
The symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy may range from mild to severe and may be
observed in as many as 70% of patients with cirrhosis. Symptoms are graded on the
following scale:
Patients with mild and moderate hepatic encephalopathy demonstrate decreased short-
term memory and concentration on mental status testing. Findings on physical
examination include asterixis and fetor hepaticus.
Laboratory abnormalities
An elevated arterial or free venous serum ammonia level is the classic laboratory
abnormality reported in patients with hepatic encephalopathy. This finding may aid in
the assignment of a correct diagnosis to a patient with cirrhosis who presents with
altered mental status.
Some patients with hepatic encephalopathy have the classic, but nonspecific,
electroencephalogram (EEG) changes of high-amplitude low-frequency waves and
triphasic waves. Electroencephalography may be helpful in the initial workup of a
patient with cirrhosis and altered mental status, when ruling out seizure activity may be
necessary.
CT scan and MRI studies of the brain may be important in ruling out intracranial lesions
when the diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy is in question.
Common precipitants
Some patients with a history of hepatic encephalopathy have normal mental status
when under medical therapy. Others have chronic memory impairment in spite of
medical management. Both groups of patients are subject to episodes of worsened
encephalopathy. Common precipitants of hyperammonemia and worsening mental
status are as follows:
Diuretic therapy
Hypovolemia
Renal failure
GI bleeding
Infection
Constipation
Differential diagnosis
Postseizure encephalopathy
Management
Lactulose
Higher doses of lactulose may be administered via either a nasogastric or rectal tube to
hospitalized patients with severe encephalopathy. Other cathartics, including colonic
lavage solutions that contain polyethylene glycol (PEG) (eg, Go-Lytely), also may be
effective in patients with severe encephalopathy.
In a study, Sharma et al concluded that the use of lactulose effectively prevents hepatic
encephalopathy recurrence in cirrhosis. Patients with cirrhosis recovering from hepatic
encephalopathy were randomized to receive lactulose (n = 61) or placebo (n = 64).
Over a median follow-up of 14 months, 12 patients (19.6%) in the lactulose group
developed hepatic encephalopathy, compared with 30 patients (46.8%) in the placebo
group.[43]
Antibiotics
Neomycin and other antibiotics (eg, metronidazole, oral vancomycin, paromomycin, oral
quinolones) serve as second-line agents. They work by decreasing the colonic
concentration of ammoniagenic bacteria. Neomycin dosing is 250-1000 mg orally 2-4
times daily. Treatment with neomycin may be complicated by ototoxicity and
nephrotoxicity.
Rifaximin (Xifaxan) is a nonabsorbable antibiotic that received FDA approval in 2004 for
the treatment of travelers' diarrhea and was given approval in 2010 for the reduction of
recurrent hepatic encephalopathy. This drug was also approved in May 2015 for the
treatment of diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D). Data from Europe
suggest that rifaximin can decrease colonic levels of ammoniagenic bacteria, with
resulting improvement in the symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy.
Other drugs
Other chemicals capable of decreasing blood ammonia levels are L-ornithine L-
aspartate (available in Europe) and sodium benzoate.[46]
Protein restriction
Low-protein diets were recommended routinely in the past for patients with cirrhosis.
High levels of aromatic amino acids contained in animal proteins were believed to lead
to increased blood levels of the false neurotransmitters tyramine and octopamine, with
resultant worsening of encephalopathic symptoms. In this author's experience, the vast
majority of patients can tolerate a protein-rich diet (>1.2 g/kg daily) that includes well-
cooked chicken, fish, vegetable protein, and, if needed, protein supplements.
Many patients with cirrhosis experience fatigue, anorexia, weight loss, and muscle
wasting. Cutaneous manifestations of cirrhosis include jaundice, spider angiomata, skin
telangiectasias (termed "paper money skin" by Dame Sheila Sherlock), palmar
erythema, white nails, disappearance of lunulae, and finger clubbing, especially in the
setting of hepatopulmonary syndrome.
Patients with cirrhosis may experience increased conversion of androgenic steroids into
estrogens in skin, adipose tissue, muscle, and bone. Males may develop gynecomastia
and impotence. Loss of axillary and pubic hair is noted in men and women.
Hyperestrogenemia also may explain spider angiomata and palmar erythema.
Hematologic manifestations
Approval was based on the ADAPT-1 and ADAPT-2 clinical trials (N=435). The trials
investigated the use of avatrombopag at two doses, 40 and 60 mg. The doses were
selected on the basis of baseline platelet count and were administered orally over 5
consecutive days. Patients underwent their procedure 5 to 8 days after receiving the
last dose. At both doses tested, a higher proportion of patients who received
avatrombopag demonstrated an increase in platelet count compared with patients who
received placebo. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients not requiring
platelet transfusions or rescue procedures for bleeding up to 7 days following the
procedure. Patients who received avatrombopag met the primary endpoint
65.6%-68.6% relative to 22.9%-33.3% who received placebo. Patients who received
avatrombopag 40 mg met the primary endpoint 87.9%-88.1% compared with
38.2%-33.3% who received placebo.[50]
A second TPO-RA, lusutrombopag (Mulpleta) was approved in July 2018 for treatment
of thrombocytopenia in adults with chronic liver disease who are scheduled to undergo
a procedure.[51] Approval was based on an international, randomized trial (N=215). The
study met its primary efficacy endpoint: 64.8% of patients in the lusutrombopag group
required no platelet transfusion and no rescue therapy for bleeding, compared with 29%
in placebo group (P< 0.0001).[52]
Patients with cirrhosis may have impaired pulmonary function. Pleural effusions and the
diaphragmatic elevation caused by massive ascites may alter ventilation-perfusion
relations. Interstitial edema or dilated precapillary pulmonary vessels may reduce
pulmonary diffusing capacity.
Patients also may have hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS). In this condition, pulmonary
arteriovenous anastomoses result in arteriovenous shunting. HPS is a potentially
progressive and life-threatening complication of cirrhosis. Classic HPS is marked by the
symptom of platypnea (shortness of breath relieved when lying down and worsened
when sitting or standing), and the finding of orthodeoxia (decrease in the arterial oxygen
tension when the patient moves from a supine to an upright position), but the syndrome
must be considered in any patient with cirrhosis who has evidence of oxygen
desaturation.
HPS is detected most readily by echocardiographic visualization of late-appearing
bubbles in the left atrium following the injection of agitated saline. Patients can receive
a diagnosis of HPS when their PaO2 is less than 70 mm Hg. Some cases of HPS may
be corrected by liver transplantation. In fact, a patient's course to liver transplantation
may be expedited when his or her PaO2 is less than 60 mm Hg.
Other diseases
Other conditions that appear with increased incidence in patients with cirrhosis include
peptic ulcer disease, diabetes, and gallstones.
Epidemiologic work shows that the CTP score may predict life expectancy in patients
with advanced cirrhosis. A CTP score of 10 or greater is associated with a 50% chance
of death within 1 year. (See Table 4, below.)
Moderate or
Ascites Absent Slight
large
Since 2002, liver transplant programs in the United States have used the Model for
End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) scoring system to assess the relative severity of
patients' liver disease. Patients may receive a MELD score of 6-40 points (see the
MELD Score calculator). The 3-month mortality statistics are associated with the
following MELD scores[55] :
Pharmacologic Treatment
Specific medical therapies may be applied to many liver diseases in an effort to diminish
symptoms and to prevent or forestall the development of cirrhosis. Examples include
prednisone and azathioprine for autoimmune hepatitis, interferon and other antiviral
agents for hepatitis B and C,[56] phlebotomy for hemochromatosis, ursodeoxycholic
acid for primary biliary cholangitis, and trientine and zinc for Wilson disease.
These therapies become progressively less effective if chronic liver disease evolves into
cirrhosis. Once cirrhosis develops, treatment is aimed at the management of
complications as they arise. Certainly variceal bleeding, ascites, and hepatic
encephalopathy are among the most serious complications experienced by patients
with cirrhosis. However, attention also must be paid to patients' chronic constitutional
complaints.
Zinc deficiency
Zinc deficiency commonly is observed in patients with cirrhosis. Treatment with zinc
sulfate at 220 mg orally twice daily may improve dysgeusia and can stimulate appetite.
Furthermore, zinc is effective in the treatment of muscle cramps and is adjunctive
therapy for hepatic encephalopathy.
Pruritus
Cholestyramine is the mainstay of therapy for the pruritus of liver disease. To avoid
compromising GI absorption, care should be taken to avoid coadministration of this
organic anion binder with any other medication.
Other medications that may provide relief against pruritus in addition to antihistamines
(eg, diphenhydramine, hydroxyzine) and ammonium lactate 12% skin cream (Lac-
Hydrin), include ursodeoxycholic acid, doxepin, and rifampin. Naltrexone may be
effective but is often poorly tolerated. Gabapentin is an unreliable therapy. Patients with
severe pruritus may require institution of ultraviolet light therapy or plasmapheresis.
Hypogonadism
Some male patients suffer from hypogonadism. Patients with severe symptoms may
undergo therapy with topical testosterone preparations, although their safety and
efficacy is not well studied. Similarly, the utility and safety of growth hormone therapy
remains unclear.
Osteoporosis
Patients with cirrhosis may develop osteoporosis. Supplementation with calcium and
vitamin D is important in patients at high risk for osteoporosis, especially patients with
chronic cholestasis or primary biliary cholangitis and patients receiving corticosteroids
for autoimmune hepatitis. The finding on bone densitometry studies of decreased bone
mineralization may prompt the institution of therapy with an aminobisphosphonate (eg,
alendronate sodium).
Vaccination
Patients with chronic liver disease should receive vaccination to protect them against
hepatitis A. Other protective measures include vaccination against influenza and
pneumococci.
The institution of any new medical therapy warrants the performance of more frequent
liver chemistries; patients with liver disease can ill afford to have drug-induced liver
disease superimposed on their condition. Medications associated with drug-induced
liver disease include the following:
Isoniazid
Valproic acid
Erythromycin
Amoxicillin-clavulanate
Ketoconazole
Chlorpromazine
Ezetimibe
Statins
In a study of the effects of statins in 58 patients with primary biliary cholangitis, Rajab
and Kaplan concluded that statin use is safe in patients with this condition.[62]
Individuals in the study were on statins for a median period of 41 months, with ALT
levels measured every 3 months. The authors found that these levels did not increase,
being slightly elevated when statin treatment began and normal by the last follow-up
analysis. Patients did not complain of muscle pain or weakness, and serum cholesterol
levels fell by 30%.
Analgesics
The use of analgesics in patients with cirrhosis can be problematic. Although high-dose
acetaminophen is a well-known hepatotoxin, most hepatologists permit the use of
acetaminophen in patients with cirrhosis at doses of up to 2000 mg daily.
NSAID use may predispose patients with cirrhosis to GI bleeding. Patients with
decompensated cirrhosis are at risk for NSAID-induced renal insufficiency, presumably
because of prostaglandin inhibition and worsening of renal blood flow. Opiate
analgesics are not contraindicated but must be used with caution in patients with
preexisting hepatic encephalopathy on account of the drugs' potential to worsen
underlying mental function.
Other drugs
A review by Lewis and Stine provided recommendations on the safe use of medications
in patients with cirrhosis, including the following[63, 64] :
Proton-pump inhibitors and histamine-2 blockers should be used only for valid
indications, since they may lead to serious infections in patients with cirrhosis
The 2010 practice guidelines for alcoholic liver disease published by the American
Association for the Study of Liver Diseases and the American College of
Gastroenterology recommend aggressive treatment of protein calorie malnutrition in
patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. Multiple feedings per day, including breakfast and a
snack at night, are specified.[65]
Surgery is said to be safe in the setting of mild chronic hepatitis. Its risk in patients with
severe chronic hepatitis is unknown. Patients with well-compensated cirrhosis have
increased, but acceptable, morbidity and mortality risks. Care should be taken to avoid
postoperative infection, fluid overload, unnecessary sedatives and analgesics, and
potentially hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic drugs (eg, aminoglycoside antibiotics).
Studies have used the MELD score as a tool in predicting postoperative outcomes in
abdominal surgery (see the MELD Score calculator). In one study, a preoperative MELD
score of greater than 14 was a better predictor of postoperative death than Child Class
C status.[68]
The benefits and the risks of surgery should be carefully weighed before advising the
patient with cirrhosis to undergo surgery.
Liver Transplantation
Liver transplantation has emerged as an important strategy in the management of
patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Patients should be referred for consideration of
liver transplantation after the first signs of hepatic decompensation.
Advances in surgical technique, organ preservation, and immunosuppression have
resulted in dramatic improvements in postoperative survival. In the early 1980s, the
percentage of patients surviving 1 year and 5 years after liver transplant were only 70%
and 15%, respectively. Now, patients can anticipate a 1-year survival rate of 85-90%
and a 5-year survival rate of higher than 70%. Quality of life after liver transplant is good
or excellent in most cases.
Contraindications to transplant
According to the 2010 guidelines for alcoholic liver disease from the American
Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, patients whose end-stage liver disease is
alcohol related should be considered as candidates for transplantation after a medical
and psychosocial evaluation that includes formal assessment of the probability of long-
term abstinence.[65]
The presence of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in the bloodstream also is a
contraindication to transplant. However, successful liver transplantations are now being
performed in patients with no detectable HIV viral load due to antiretroviral therapy.[71]
Additional clinical studies are required before liver transplantation can be offered
routinely to such patients.
Organ allocation
Approximately 6500 liver transplants are performed in the United States each year. An
increasing number of lives are being saved every year by transplant. However, the
number of diagnosed cases of cirrhosis is rising, fueled in part by the hepatitis C
epidemic and by the growing number of cases of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
(NAFLD). This has resulted in a dramatic increase in the number of patients listed as
candidates for liver transplantation.
Approximately 12-15% of patients listed as candidates die while waiting because of the
relatively static number of organ donations. Strategies to improve the current donor
organ shortage include programs to increase public awareness of the importance of
organ donation, increased use of living donor liver transplantation for pediatric and adult
recipients, organ donation after cardiac death, and the use of extended criteria donors
(ECDs).
An ECD "deviates in some aspect from the ideal donor." One example of an ECD organ
is the hepatitis C-infected liver with minimal fibrosis that is transplanted into a hepatitis
C-infected recipient. Such transplants have been performed successfully for a number
of years. Other examples of ECDs include donors older than 70 years and donors with
relatively minimal fatty livers.
The need for a more efficient and equitable system of organ allocation resulted in
dramatic changes in United States organ allocation policy in 2002.[72] Previously,
patients who were accepted as liver transplant candidates with 7-9 CTP points (Child
Class B) received low priority on the transplant waiting list maintained by the United
Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS). Patients with 10 or more CTP points (Child Class
C) received a higher priority. Emergent liver transplantation at UNOS status 1 was
reserved primarily for noncirrhotic patients suffering from fulminant hepatic failure.
Since 2002, livers from deceased donors (ie, cadaveric organs) have been allocated to
cirrhotic patients using the MELD scoring system and the Pediatric End-Stage Liver
Disease (PELD) scoring system[55] (see the MELD Score calculator and the PELD
Score calculator).
In the MELD scoring system for adults, a patient receives a score based on the
following formula:
MELD score = 0.957 x Loge (creatinine mg/dL) + 0.378 x Loge (bilirubin mg/dL) + 1.120
x Loge (INR) + 0.643
As an example, a cirrhotic patient with a creatinine level of 1.9 mg/dL, a bilirubin level of
4.2 mg/dL, and an INR of 1.2 would receive the following score:
MELD score = (0.957 x Loge 1.9) + (0.378 x Loge 4.2) + (1.120 x Loge 1.2) + 0.643 =
2.039
That value is then multiplied by 10 to give the patient a risk score of 20. Patients' MELD
scores are recalculated every time they undergo laboratory testing. Patients can be
assigned a maximum MELD score of 40 points.
The PELD system uses a somewhat different formula: PELD score = 0.480 x Loge
(total bilirubin mg/dL) + 1.857 x Loge (INR) - 0.687 x Loge (albumin g/dL) + 0.436 if the
patient is younger than 1 year + 0.667 if the patient has growth failure (< 2 standard
deviations). This value is multiplied by 10 to give a final risk score.
Within any region of the country, a donor organ in a particular ABO blood group is
allocated to the cirrhotic patient within the same blood group who has the highest MELD
or PELD score. Special rules have been developed to address potentially life-
threatening liver disease complications, such as hepatocellular carcinoma and
hepatopulmonary syndrome. Patients with these conditions, as well as other
exceptional cases, can receive a higher MELD or PELD score than that calculated from
creatinine, bilirubin, and INR alone.
The timing of the transplant surgery for patients on the transplant waiting list is a key
issue. Typically, it is believed that the risks of the transplant may exceed the benefits
when the MELD score is less than 15. However, when the MELD score is greater than
15, the benefits of the transplant typically exceed the risks.[73] Needless to say, there
can be many exceptions to this so-called rule.
Living donor liver transplantation
The advent of living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has introduced a new variable
into any discussion of the timing of transplantation. LDLT has the potential to make liver
transplantation an elective procedure not only for the cirrhotic patient with significant
complications but also for the cirrhotic patient with a poor quality of life.
LDLT became a reality for pediatric recipients in 1988 and for adult recipients a decade
later. The procedure arose from advances in surgical technique and a worsening
shortage of deceased donor organs. In LDLT, up to 60% of a healthy volunteer donor's
liver can be surgically resected and transplanted into the abdomen of a recipient. Graft
survival in LDLT recipients is on par with that seen in the recipients of deceased donor
organs.
However, LDLT has its limitations. The most obvious problem is the low, but real, risk of
serious operative complications for the healthy volunteer liver donor. It is estimated that
about 0.4% of the more than 3000 healthy liver donors worldwide over the last decade
have died as a consequence of their surgery. Thus, transplant programs must maximize
donor safety. They must also ensure that the benefits of LDLT to the potential recipient
offset the risks to the donor.
Furthermore, not every potential recipient is sufficiently stable to undergo safe and
effective LDLT. Indeed, the recipient's risk of posttransplant mortality increases when his
or her MELD score is greater than 25. In the author's opinion, LDLT should not be
performed in such recipients.
The shortage of donor organs has spurred interest in the use of liver allografts from
non–heart beating donors (NHBDs). Typically, an NHBD is an individual who has
sustained irreversible neurologic damage but whose clinical condition does not meet
formal brain death criteria. Knowing this, a prospective donor's family will give consent
for withdrawal of care and for organ donation. The donor is then brought to the
operating room, with the anticipation that withdrawal of ventilator support will result in
the cessation of the patient's cardiopulmonary function. Once death is declared, organ
procurement surgery can proceed.
In contrast to the organ procured from a heart-beating donor (HBD), the allograft
obtained from an NHBD may be subject to considerable warm ischemia time before it is
perfused with the cold preservative solution.
A review comparing the results of liver transplantation using allografts from 144 NHBDs
and 26,856 HBDs over an 8-year period found better outcomes in HBD transplant
recipients.[74] One- and 3-year graft survival rates were 70% and 63%, respectively,
with organs from NHBDs, as opposed to 80% and 72%, respectively, with organs from
HBDs. Higher rates of primary nonfunction and retransplantation were seen in the
recipients of allografts from NHBDs.
Other authors have described a higher incidence of hepatic artery stenosis, hepatic
abscesses, and bilomas in the recipients of allografts from NHBDs.[75] It is possible
that improved results will be seen by limiting donor age, by minimizing donor warm
ischemia time, and by not attempting to transplant livers from NHBDs into recipients
who are severely ill.
Exciting new technical advances also may help to improve patients' chances of survival.
In the future, expanded use of hepatocyte transplantation may occur. In this therapy, a
splenic artery catheter is used to deliver billions of cryopreserved hepatocytes into the
spleen of a patient who has end-stage liver disease. The patient then undergoes routine
immunosuppression. This strategy has been employed successfully in a small number
of patients with cirrhosis and fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) who were not candidates
for liver transplant surgery.
Bioartificial livers may see increased application in the care of patients with FHF and,
perhaps, cirrhosis. The two most studied devices are composed of semipermeable
capillary hollow fiber membranes enclosed in a plastic shell. Either human C3A
hepatoma cells or pig hepatocytes are attached to the exterior surface of the
membranes as blood from the patient is pumped through the device. Intracranial
pressure and hepatic encephalopathy improved in some patients with FHF who were
assisted with these devices. However, currently available bioartificial livers have not yet
fulfilled the goals of biotransforming and removing toxins while supplying the patient
with clotting factors and growth factors.
Xenotransplantation may come into use during the next decade. To date, all attempts at
xenotransplantation in humans have suffered from severe, early humoral or late cellular
rejection and have resulted in patient death. Advances in genetic engineering may lead
to the development of swine as an organ donor because its livers are more likely to
undergo graft acceptance when transplanted into humans. Once this obstacle is
overcome, a determination can be made as to whether a swine liver is an effective
substitute for a human liver.
Most importantly, the medical world awaits the development of medical therapies that
forestall the development of hepatic fibrosis long before patients develop cirrhosis and
its complications.
Patient Monitoring
Patients with cirrhosis should undergo routine follow-up monitoring of their complete
blood count, renal and liver chemistries, and prothrombin time. The author's policy is to
monitor stable patients 3-4 times per year.
The author performs routine diagnostic endoscopy to determine whether the patient has
asymptomatic esophageal varices. Follow-up endoscopy is performed in 2 years if
varices are not present. If varices are present, treatment is initiated with a nonselective
beta blocker (eg, propranolol, nadolol), aiming for a 25% reduction in heart rate. Such
therapy offers effective primary prophylaxis against new onset of variceal bleeding.[76]
Patients with large esophageal varices should undergo prophylactic endoscopic
variceal ligation.
The incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has risen in the United States. The
practice guidelines of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
recommend that patients with cirrhosis undergo surveillance for HCC with
ultrasonography every 6 months.[77] The discovery of a liver nodule should prompt the
performance of a 4-phase CT scan or an MRI scan (ie, unenhanced, arterial, venous,
and delayed phases). Lesions that enhance in the arterial phase and exhibit "washout"
in the delayed phases are highly suggestive of HCC.
Many authors contend that the combination of arterial enhancement and washout on CT
scanning or MRI offers greater diagnostic power for HCC than does guided liver biopsy.
[78, 79] Indeed, guided liver biopsies have a 20-30% false negative rate in making the
diagnosis of HCC. Current guidelines support the use of CT scanning and MRI in
confirming the presence of HCC. Biopsy is not required in order to define a lesion as
HCC.[77] However, CT scanning or ultrasonographically guided liver biopsy may be
useful when a nodule’s enhancement characteristics are not typical for HCC.
Patients who are awaiting liver transplantation are often offered minimally invasive
therapies in an effort to keep tumors from spreading. These therapies include
percutaneous injection therapy with ethanol, radiofrequency and microwave thermal
ablation, chemoembolization, intensity-modulated radiation therapy, and
radioembolization.
Cirrhosis
For individuals with compensated cirrhosis and mild portal hypertension, the AASLD
provides the following guidance[13] :
For individuals with compensated cirrhosis and CSPH but without gastroesophageal
varices, the AASLD recommends the following[13] :
Nonselective beta-blockers are the recommended therapy for patients with high-
risk small esophageal varices (ie, primary prevention in patients with small
esophageal varices).
Either traditional nonselective beta-blockers (eg, propranolol, nadolol),
carvedilol, or endoscopic variceal ligation (EVL) is recommended for the
prevention of first variceal hemorrhage (VH) (primary prophylaxis) in patients
with medium or large varices.
Treatment selection should be based on patient preference and characteristics.
Patients on nonselective beta-blockers or carvedilol for primary prophylaxis do
not require monitoring with serial esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD).
Not recommended in this setting: The combination therapy of nonselective
beta-blockers plus EVL
Not recommended in the prevention of first VH: Transjugular intrahepatic
portosystemic shunt (TIPS) placement
Variceal bleeding
For patients who present with acute esophageal VH, the AASLD guidelines indicate the
following[13] :
For individuals who have recovered from an episode of acute esophageal VH, the
AASLD recommends the following[13] :
EASL Recommendations
In 2018, the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) released updated
guidelines for the management of decompensated cirrhosis[80] and hepatocellular
carcinoma (HCC),[81] as outlined below.
Cirrhosis
Neutrophil count and culture of ascitic fluid culture (bedside inoculation of blood culture
bottles with 10 mL fluid each) should be performed to exclude bacterial peritonitis. A
neutrophil count above 250 cells/µL is required to diagnose spontaneous bacterial
peritonitis (SBP).
Ascitic total protein concentration should be performed to identify patients at higher risk
of developing SBP.
The serum ascites albumin gradient (SAAG) should be calculated when the cause of
ascites is not immediately evident, and/or when conditions other than cirrhosis are
suspected.
Diets with a very low sodium content (< 40 mmol/day) should be avoided, as they favor
diuretic-induced complications and can endanger a patient’s nutritional status.
Patients with the first episode of grade 2 (moderate) ascites should receive an anti-
mineralocorticoid drug alone, starting at 100 mg/day with stepwise increases every
72 hr (in 100 mg steps) to a maximum of 400 mg/day if there is no response to lower
doses.
During diuretic therapy, a maximum weight loss of 0.5 kg/day in patients without edema
and 1 kg/day in patients with edema is recommended.
Once ascites has largely resolved, the dose of diuretics should be reduced to the lowest
effective dose.
Large volume paracentesis (LVP) is the first-line therapy in patients with large ascites
(grade 3 ascites), which should be completely removed in a single session. LVP should
be followed with plasma volume expansion to prevent post-paracentesis circulatory
dysfunction (PPCD).
In patients undergoing LVP less than 5 L of ascites, the risk of developing PPCD is low.
However, it is generally agreed that these patients should still be treated with albumin
because of concerns about use of alternative plasma expanders.
Diuretics should be discontinued in patients with refractory ascites who do not excrete
>30 mmol/day of sodium under diuretic treatment.
Hepatocellular carcinoma
Vaccination against hepatitis B reduces the risk of HCC and is recommended for all
newborns and high-risk groups.
Coffee consumption has been shown to decrease the risk of HCC in patients with
chronic liver disease. In these patients, coffee consumption should be encouraged.
Noninvasive criteria can only be applied to cirrhotic patients for nodule(s) ≥1 cm, in light
of the high pre-test probability and are based on imaging techniques obtained by
multiphasic computed tomography (CT), dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI), or contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS). Diagnosis is based
on the identification of the typical hallmarks of HCC, which differ according to imaging
techniques or contrast agents (arterial phase hyperenhancement [APHE]) with washout
in the portal venous or delayed phases on CT and MRI using extracellular contrast
agents or gadobenate dimeglumine, APHE with washout in the portal venous phase on
MRI using gadoxetic acid, APHE with late-onset (>60 s) washout of mild intensity on
CEUS).
Because of their higher sensitivity and the analysis of the whole liver, CT scanning or
MRI should be used first.
Staging systems for clinical decision making in HCC should include tumor burden, liver
function, and performance status.
Perioperative mortality of liver resection (LR) in cirrhotic patients should be less than
3%.
LR is recommended for single HCC of any size and in particular for tumors >2 cm, when
hepatic function is preserved, and when sufficient remnant liver volume is maintained.
Thermal ablation with radiofrequency is the standard of care for patients with BCLC
(Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer) 0 and A tumors not suitable for surgery. Thermal
ablation in single tumors 2 to 3 cm in size is an alternative to surgical resection based
on technical factors (location of the tumor) and hepatic and extrahepatic patient
conditions.
In patients with very early stage HCC (BCLC-0), radiofrequency ablation in favorable
locations can be adopted as first-line therapy even in surgical patients.
Ethanol injection is an option in some cases where thermal ablation is not technically
feasible, especially in tumors < 2 cm.
Sorafenib is the standard first-line systemic therapy for HCC. It is indicated for patients
with well-preserved liver function (Child-Pugh A) and with advanced tumors (BCLC–C)
or earlier stage tumors progressing upon or unsuitable for loco-regional therapies.
What are the CDC risk-based testing guidelines for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection?